Control Your Linux Desktop with D-Bus

In the rest of this article, I show some of the D-Bus functionality
exposed by some popular applications and write some scripts to
communicate with those applications and automate some tasks. Hopefully,
this will give you some inspiration to communicate with your own favorite
applications. I use different D-Bus tools and script languages
to show the different ways you can use D-Bus.

I've already mentioned the first way to make use of D-Bus: by using the
KDE programs qdbusviewer and qdbus. However, if you're not into KDE, you
can use the command-line programs dbus-send and dbus-monitor to send and
monitor D-Bus messages, respectively. For example, you can put the system
into suspend mode with the following command:

As you can see, the dbus-send calls are almost identical to the ones with
qdbus. The only difference is that you have to use the --dest parameter
for the service name. But, let's look at something new. If you are watching a
long YouTube video in your browser, the screensaver can kick in, because
the Flash plugin doesn't communicate with the rest of your system. With
D-Bus, you can stop this annoying behavior. The magic command is this:

With this command, you call the Inhibit method of the org.gnome.ScreenSaver
interface with two arguments. The first one is the application's name. I
use “YouTube” here, but it can be an arbitrary name. The second argument
is the reason to inhibit the screensaver. dbus-send expects each argument
to be preceded by its type, such as string, boolean, int16 and so on. The two
arguments here are strings. I also use the argument --print-reply, because
I need the reply of the command: the Inhibit method returns a uint32
number, which is a “cookie” identifying the inhibit request.
If you want
to uninhibit the screensaver, you have to send this cookie as the argument:

With these two commands, you can hack your own personal
screensaver-inhibition shell script.
Note: you need to save the cookie to a variable or a file
when the first command runs and then substitute the actual cookie value
in the command above.

If you are debugging D-Bus scripts or observing the methods and signals
of other D-Bus applications, the command-line program dbus-monitor comes
in very handy. Just fire it up in a terminal, and you will see all D-Bus
activity scrolling by.
dbus-monitor is useful for seeing all D-Bus activity in real time. So if something is
happening on your system, for example, your network goes down, you can see
in the output of dbus-monitor how this message is sent to the D-Bus bus. This
way, you know which signals to listen for or which methods to call to tap
in to the same events.

dbus-monitor also allows you to specify a set of expressions you want
to watch—for example:

$ dbus-monitor --system "interface='org.freedesktop.NetworkManager'"

This will monitor all NetworkManager events. I use the --system argument
because NetworkManager uses the system bus.

Scripting the Liferea Feed Reader

The Liferea feed reader has a small but interesting set of D-Bus
methods. The most interesting method is Subscribe, which allows you to
add a feed to Liferea from another application. One application that uses
this is FeedBag, a Firefox extension that modifies the feed button
in the browser's address bar: if you click on the button, it will add
a subscription to Liferea instead of to the Live Bookmarks. Under the hood,
this works because FeedBag calls the org.gnome.feed.Reader.Subscribe
method. You can do the same from a terminal:

Liferea provides a script, liferea-add-feed, which does exactly this,
but with some added error handling.

Liferea also exposes some information via D-Bus, which is interesting
if you have an alternative window manager that is not using Liferea's
notification area. Then, you can brew your own notification system—just
ask for the number of new and unread items in Liferea and show the output:

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